In support of Bowel Cancer Awareness month
Watch our video feature to find out how to protect yourself
against the UK’s second biggest cancer killer during Bowel Cancer
Awareness Month (April 2012)
Bowel cancer is the third most common cancer
in the UK with 38,500 new cases every year. Around half of these
people will die, making it the second most common cause of cancer
death after lung cancer, but despite this, many of us have no idea
what the symptoms are.
Early diagnosis is vital because, if spotted
early, bowel cancer is one of the most treatable forms of cancers
(with over 90% of people surviving for 5 years or more if the
cancer is diagnosed in the early stages).
There are currently a number of ways to screen for bowel
cancer:
- Faecal Occult Blood test (FOBt) which can be carried out
at home and checks for blood in
stools
- Flexible sigmoidoscopy (flexi-sig) which involves passing an
endoscope (thin, flexible tube
with a miniature video camera on the end) into the first
part of the colon and must be done
at a hospital
- CT (virtual) colonography, again carried out in hospital
- Colonoscopy, which involves inserting a long, flexible
endoscope all the way around the colon
to directly visualise all areas where polyps and
cancer can occur.
Risk factors of developing the disease include a family history
of bowel cancer, obesity and increasing age (with 8 out of 10 cases
of bowel cancer occurring in people aged 60 and over).
It is important to be aware of the key symptoms, although
unfortunately, some of the these can be overlooked or mistaken:
The London Clinic’s Dr Julian Teare, Consultant
Gastroenterologist, and Mr
Alistair Windsor, Consultant Colorectal Surgeon, explain the
importance of bowel cancer screening and symptoms to look out
for.
For more
information, please email info@thelondonclinic.co.uk